How would you sink a ship..and control the backlash?:

Not talking about any actual pairings in any flame war in fandoms but how would you sink a ship if you were writing a work of fiction or your own universe/setting and two of the characters are being paired together by fans and you don't like their worldview? However, this causes a lot of backlash, which is inevitable. However, how would you contain it?

Bonus points if you manage to make both characters likable in the eyes of the fans in the end without one of them turning into The Scrappy(unless the plot states that one of them is supposed to be unlikable or do a Heel–Face Turn)

Hmm.. This might be considered a weak, if not bad, way to control the backlash from Ship Sinking but, if I'm the writer, I would just write up an alternate non-canon route for that ship just to appease the shippers of the Fan-Preferred Couple.

But then again, shipping wars is the reason I don't like to focus on romance in my works. Whoever I pair the characters with, especially the main character, I'm basically screwed.

Hmm.. very good question. I would like to try that for a different story whenever I'm not in the mood for writing the story I am currently working on.

I think one good way to do this is to create a new character, or bring in an existing one, and develop them into someone the fans would like. Make then a likeable person, look deep at the Mary Sue and Creator's Pet pages so you can avoid forcing this character onto the fans, maybe try and make them an Ensemble Darkhorse. What you're doing here is building up the character to be the love interest for one of the characters in the ship, by making a new character that fans would like, or drawing more focus on a character fans already like, when you write in how this character and one from the ship get together fans are not going to become as upset about it. They would want this character you have developed to be happy, they like the character, so of course listening to fan feedback and trying to cater to what they want is important but fans will be more accepting that you move the story how you want rather than what they want.

It's always good to have a fair idea of where you want to take a story, though this can be hard for one off projects. One of the things with shipping is if you hadn't planned on it and it comes up you might think Sure, Why Not? This worked to great...well, to great effect when fans really wanted Garrus and Tali to be romance options, and BioWare agreed. On the other hand, you might not like to take your characters in that direction for one reason or another, and if you as a writer doesn't support a particular ship then really you're the writer, you need to control how much of an impact fans have on what you write. If you don't want to support a fan ship there's no rule saying you have to.

As far as whether planning things in advance helps, sure. You could always give subtle hints in your story on where it could lead, then of course they could be subverted, Double Subverted, however you think will work the best way.

I'm in the same boat than Major Tom and Leradny, and I bet many other writers on this forum are too. You shouldn't be worrying about backlash. Don't obsess over backlash. It takes more than wrecking one romance to send a large number of your readers to abandon ship.

In fact, such action, along with similar ones, might yield benefits from fans generating buzz, which lead other people to find out about your work and check it out. One person out, two people in.

In fact, shipping wars is one huge source of buzz for many popular franchises today.

How else did you get to know about the Harry Potter franchise if not for its premise considered to be the most loathed among religious zealots, and the Ginny/Harry/Hermione or Lily/James/Snape shipping wars?

No Twilight discussion is complete without the Edward/Bella/Jacob shipping wars.

^ That's why you just let them happen and run with your own plans. Keep your plans in the dark for them and they'll just keep speculating until canon confirms one way or another.

You can be aware of the shipping wars when writing such plans, hell you can even tease or play with it. Just don't let it dominate your thinking. "X/Y is the most popular ship in the fandom but I planned for Y/Z! Maybe I should change?" is not a good way to write. At least anything not shallow that is.

"Allah may guide their bullets, but Jesus helps those who aim down the sights."

But really, I really wouldn't care who the fans might imagine boinking who; I would probably ignore them anyway, so what reason would I have to care in the first place? The exception to this might be something really reprehensible, but the likelihood of such pairings not only being taken seriously but being popular (assuming that this thing gets any notoriety in the first place) is exceedingly unlikely.

Although I must admit that the prospect of Linus/Nathalie fanfiction crosses so many lines so many times that I can't help but be amused at the notion.

I agree with the "who gives a damn" set. However, more seriously, if you want to sink a ship, I think the best way might be to make it clear why they wouldn't work as a couple. Or give them a friendship that's more interesting than if they were a couple.

Sadly, I've yet to encounter this situation. The only person to tell me they ship any of my characters was a yaoi fan saying she ships two of my male characters. However, if I do end up in this situation, my reaction would probably depend on my mood. I might either make it clear in the text that the characters have no romantic interest in each other, or if I'm feeling trollish, I might tease it for a little while first.

Personally, I wouldn't really care who the fans ship with who (Even in potentially weird combinations, as long as they care about the characters, I don't mind) I might make a Fandom Nod or two to touch on it, but I wouldn't explicitly ruin a ship forever. Then again, if it's a ship that makes absolutely no sense at all or such and it has a completely serious fan following, I'd probably make an exception and perhaps make a particuarly brutal Fandom NodShip Sinking double whammy... I plan on being a Trolling Creator to a certain extent

Personally, I wouldn't really care who the fans ship with who (Even in potentially weird combinations, as long as they care about the characters, I don't mind) I might make a Fandom Nod or two to touch on it, but I wouldn't explicitly ruin a ship forever. Then again, if it's a ship that makes absolutely no sense at all or such and it has a completely serious fan following, I'd probably make an exception and perhaps make a particuarly brutal Fandom NodShip Sinking double whammy... I plan on being a Trolling Creator to a certain extent

While I find the practice of making direct nods to fandom dubious, I think it that would be amusing to see a writer respond to a fan-favoured non-canon by killing the fan favourite of the pair, having the survivor grieve with clear erotic longing... and then having that character rebound by hooking up with the least popular character in the story, all the while giving excellent in-story justification for each event.

I don't see why one would do any of this. Shippers gonna ship. When I do indulge in shipping, it's often with characters who have never even met. Nobody really cares that they don't hook up in the source material. This is what fanfiction is for.

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